Edgeboro, Inc. v. East Brunswick Township

106 A.2d 337, 31 N.J. Super. 238, 1954 N.J. Super. LEXIS 559
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 17, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 106 A.2d 337 (Edgeboro, Inc. v. East Brunswick Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edgeboro, Inc. v. East Brunswick Township, 106 A.2d 337, 31 N.J. Super. 238, 1954 N.J. Super. LEXIS 559 (N.J. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Goldmans, J. S. C.

This is an injunction action wherein Edgeboro, Inc. seeks to restrain defendant, its officials, em[240]*240ployees and servants, from in any way interfering with and preventing the company from disposing of all garbage, ashes, refuse, trash and debris of the City of New Brunswick (hereinafter designated as the city) at the company’s dumping area in East Brunswick Township (hereinafter designated as the township). The city seeks similar restraint against any interference with its delivery of such waste materials to Edgeboro at the dumping area. An order to show cause with interim restraint issued. On the return day defendant moved for summary judgment in its favor on the ground that the complaint set forth no cause of action and the pleadings raised no material issue of fact. It also moved for an order permanently restraining plaintiffs from disposing of the city’s garbage, ashes and refuse at Edgeboro’s dumping area in the township. The parties have agreed to submit the matter for determination on the statement of facts and legal issues set out in the pretrial order.

Edgeboro owns about 400 acres of unimproved lowland and swampland in the defendant township, situated in an area designated by the township zoning ordinance of December 23, 1952 as fiheavy industrial.” Section XIII of the ordinance provides:

“Uses Permitted
In the Heavy Industrial H. I. Zone, no lot shall be used or no structure shall be erected, altered or occupied for residential purposes or for any purpose except the following:
(1) Uses permitted in the Light Industrial L. I. Zone.
(2) All industrial and manufacturing uses if located not less than 500 feet from the boundary of a district other than an industrial district and upon issuance of a use permit by the Board of Adjustment.
(3) A use permit shall be granted after proof is submitted that no danger to life, limb, or property is created beyond the limits of the lot and that no objectionable noise, smell, smoke, dust, gas, glare, or effluent is emitted, the effect of which is noticeable outside the Industrial district. Such permitted uses may include:
❖ * *
(5) The dumping, incineration or disposal of refuse. * *

[241]*241Since February 1953 a large part of the Edgeboro tract has been devoted to and used for the dumping and disposal of garbage, ashes, refuse, trash and debris from defendant township, which has delivered such materials to Edgeboro and deposited them on its lands. In January 1954 the township entered into an agreement with Edgeboro whereby, in consideration of an annual payment of $3,080, the township was permitted to dump and dispose of all of its garbage, ashes and refuse on the Edgeboro tract for a term of three years, at such spots as Edgeboro might designate. Edgeboro agreed properly to maintain, supervise and safeguard the dump area at its owu cost and expense. One of the provisions of the contract was:

“It is understood between the parties hereto that consent has heretofore been granted by resolutions of the party of the second part [East Brunswick Township] and The Township Board of Health to the use of the aforementioned dumping grounds by the Borough of Milltown upon certain stipulated conditions, and such consent constitutes a portion of the consideration to the party of the first part in executing this contract. * * *”

Attached to the agreement was the following consent of the township board of adjustment:

“Pursuant to the provisions of Section 13 of the Zoning Ordinance of the Township of East Brunswick, we hereby consent to the use of the foregoing described lands as a dump, pursuant to the terms, conditions and regulations contained in the within agreement.”

In January 1954 the Borough of Milltown entered into a substantially similar agreement with Edgeboro for three years at $3,500 per year. In connection with this contract Edgeboro applied for and obtained consents from the governing body and board of health of defendant township to the dumping of Milltown’s garbage and ashes on the Edgeboro tract. Milltown has been carting and delivering its garbage and ashes to Edgeboro at the dumping area, without interference by defendant township.

Plaintiffs contend that, relying upon the fact that the lands in question were zoned by the township as a dumping area [242]*242and were so used, they entered into a valid agreement in April 1954 (after advertisement, bid and acceptance of bid) giving the. city dumping rights for a period of five years at $32,000 a year. By that contract Edgeboro agreed to permit the city to dump and dispose of all its garbage, ashes, refuse, trash and debris at such places in the Edgeboro dumping area as Edgeboro might designate, the quantity not to exceed 125 tons a day. On its part Edgeboro agreed, at its sole cost and expense, properly to maintain, supervise and safeguard the dumping area in the manner provided in the contract. It was specified that the $32,000 annual payment was to compensate Edgeboro for the following: $15,500 for furnishing all necessary supplies, equipment and labor for operating the dumping ground; $14,500 for all fill dirt necessary to cover the refuse delivered by the city, and $2,000 for the maintenance of a private road on the Edgeboro tract leading to the dumping area. The agreement expressly provided that it was the intention of the parties that Edgeboro “shall be solely responsible for the proper operation and maintenance of said dumping area, * *

Plaintiff city began to deliver its garbage and ashes to the dumping area on May 4, but the operation was halted when the township police arrested its truck drivers. Similar action was taken the next day. This injunction action resulted.

It is plaintiffs’ contention that since the Edgeboro tract has been zoned for dumping and no ordinance has been enacted imposing additional regulations or restrictions, no further municipal permission is required by Edgeboro for the maintenance and operation of its dumping area. It is admitted that neither Edgeboro nor the city has sought or obtained the consent of the township governing board or the township board of health for disposing of New Brunswick’s garbage, ashes and refuse.

Defendant raises the following defenses:

1. The contract between the plaintiffs is a lease relating to lands within- the confines of the township, and accordingly the provisions [243]*243of R. S. 40 :66-3 apply and a permit is required from both the governing body and board of health of the township.
2. The contract provides for the disposal of waste and refuse other than indestructible waste, of the City of New Brunswick, and for that reason is ultra vires by reason of the provisions of R. S. 40 :66-3.
3. Edgeboro is estopped from denying the necessity of securing permits from the township and its board of health for the dumping operations in question in view of the fact that it sought and obtained such permits in connection with the Milltown contract which is quite similar to the New Brunswick contract.
4.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A.2d 337, 31 N.J. Super. 238, 1954 N.J. Super. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgeboro-inc-v-east-brunswick-township-njsuperctappdiv-1954.